Authors
Valeria Nicolosi, Manish Chhowalla, Mercouri G Kanatzidis, Michael S Strano, Jonathan N Coleman
Publication date
2013/6/21
Source
Science
Volume
340
Issue
6139
Pages
1226419
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Background
Since at least 400 C.E., when the Mayans first used layered clays to make dyes, people have been harnessing the properties of layered materials. This gradually developed into scientific research, leading to the elucidation of the laminar structure of layered materials, detailed understanding of their properties, and eventually experiments to exfoliate or delaminate them into individual, atomically thin nanosheets. This culminated in the discovery of graphene, resulting in a new explosion of interest in two-dimensional materials.
Layered materials consist of two-dimensional platelets weakly stacked to form three-dimensional structures. The archetypal example is graphite, which consists of stacked graphene monolayers. However, there are many others: from MoS2 and layered clays to more exotic examples such as MoO3, GaTe, and Bi2Se3. These materials display a wide range of electronic, optical …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
V Nicolosi, M Chhowalla, MG Kanatzidis, MS Strano… - Science, 2013